Slow Progress in Memphis

On April 4th, 1968, Martin Luther King, Jr. was shot and killed in Memphis, Tennessee, most likely with the complicity of the Memphis Police Department. So, it’s nice that the city council finally got around to renaming the three city parks named in honor of the Confederacy.

The old names were Confederate Park; Jefferson Davis Park, named for the Confederacy’s president; and Nathan Bedford Forrest Park, named for a Confederate lieutenant general and the Klan’s first grand wizard. The new names are Memphis Park, Mississippi River Park and Health Sciences Park, but the council may change those, too.

Of course, the Ku Klux Klan is upset about this and they decided to have an Easter-weekend rally protesting the name changes. Apparently, they managed to muster about 60 shitheads and were outnumbered by the police.

The night before Dr. King died, he gave one of his greatest speeches at the Mason Temple in Memphis. And it almost didn’t happen. It was pouring rain so badly that people had to pull their cars over to the side of the road. Dr. King didn’t think anyone would show up at the church in that kind of weather and he was feeling ill, so he sent Andrew Young and Ralph Abernathy ahead and told them if there was anyone at the church to call him and he’d come down there.

You can read the transcript of the civil trial that found the Memphis police responsible for MLK Jr’s death here. It’s sad that it’s been 45 years since Dr. King died and the Memphis city council is only now formally recognizing that honoring the Confederacy is insulting and stupid. But at least they’re doing it. And it’s pretty encouraging that the Klan can’t do better than 60 morons and a broken megaphone.

Look for the Union Bunny

Bullied, harassed, and lied to, District 1 of the Amalgamated Association of Easter Bunnies, AFB-CIO (American Federation of Bunnies-Cottontails International Organization) went on strike, forcing a halt to this year’s Easter egg hunts.

At Bunny Headquarters, Solomon P. Bunny, union executive secretary, and a militant corps of Easter bunnies were preparing picket signs. I walked in, notepad in hand.
“Excuse me, Mr. Bunny, but why aren’t your members delivering eggs this week?”

Bunny looked up from the papers on his desk, chomped harder on his cigar, looked at me, scowled, and answered harshly, “Don’t you know!?”

“No, sir,” I replied apologetically. “I always thought you were happy and content passing out your Easter eggs.”

“We love it,” growled Bunny, “but the reactionary governments of several states don’t love us. They claim unionized bunnies are anti-American and a drain upon the limited budgets.”

“Don’t the people have a right to balance their budget without excessive union demands?” I asked.

“Listen, Ink Breath, if these bobbleheads didn’t roll over and let the corporations rub their fat little behinds and expel corporate welfare, there would be enough money to deal with reasonable worker demands and the social services these granite brains are cutting.”
“Even with these facts, I doubt you’d have much support,” I said, noting that most taxpayers don’t want to pay more taxes, and think union workers are greedy opportunists who deserve to be thrown on their tails, even if made of cotton.

“Listen, Lead-type-for-brains, collective bargaining is one of humanity’s most fundamental rights. Says so in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, approved by 48 countries in 1948.” Bunny then went into one of his files, pulled out a sheaf of papers, and slammed it on the desk. “Read it!” he commanded. Not wanting to further upset a furious bunny, I skimmed the report that revealed about two-thirds of Americans support the rights of collective bargaining.

“What are your main grievances?” I asked.

“For one lousy week, we prepare and distribute colored eggs. That leaves 51 other weeks when all we’re doing is multiplying. You can’t make any money that way.”

“But don’t you get paid extraordinarily well on Easter Sunday?”

“Hey, man, ever try to tell the carrotman that all you have is some moldy lettuce to pay the month’s food bill?”

“I see your point,” I said, feeling a little sorry for the bunnies. “What are your other demands?”

“A decent living wage and a hutch of our own,” said the executive secretary. “No more of this lettuce stuff. We want cold hard cash. Just like what those religious folks put in the collection plates once a year.”

“That seems fair,” I responded. “Are there other demands?”

“You bet your union card there are,” said Bunny. “We want a 50-week work year, with two weeks vacation; that’s still fewer vacation days than in most civilized countries. We want nine paid holidays, reasonable sick leave, maternity and day care benefits, medical and dental insurance–do you realize dentists charge us double because of the size of our incisors?–and a prohibition against using us for cosmetic testing.”

“But Easter is only one day a year,” I said. “Certainly you can’t expect Easter every day.”

“What’s so bad about that? Look what it’ll do for the egg, Peeps, and clothing industries. If Easter was every day we’d soon have full employment.”

“What about religion? Wouldn’t the Church have objections?”

“Why should it? Look at all those people who’d be going to church and putting all that money in the collection plate.”

“You certainly have a point,” I said, admiring Bunny’s determination. “Are there other demands?”

“Other than membership in the Bunny Club, rigorous enforcement of safety standards, and a better employee grievance procedure–no.”

“You’re willing to disappoint all the children just because some adults are insensitive to worker needs?”

We don’t want to harm the children. They haven’t learned how to be bought off to be effective politicians.”

“So you will deliver Easter eggs this week!” I said, thrilled that the bunny union was relenting.

“This is off-the-record, but this year everyone will get their eggs. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have to get back to preparing for a demonstration.”

As I left, Solomon P. Bunny was slashing through contracts, and multi-tasking on three different phones and two computer screens. But, he warned if the rotten eggs of some of the state legislatures and their buddies in corporate industry don’t stop pretending how religious and patriotic they are, while consistently violating the principles that Jesus stood for, “this will be the last Easter they will ever celebrate.”

[Walter Brasch is a social activist and award-winning journalist who has been a member of unions for four decades. His current book is the best-selling Fracking Pennsylvania, an in-depth investigation into the health, environmental, economic, political, and worker safety issues of hydraulic horizontal fracturing.]

Well, That Touched a Nerve

The New York Times’ obituary of Yvonne Brille really touched a nerve. I understand why, but I am a little surprised at the intensity of the reaction. I think part of the point of the obituary was to emphasize that although she was an accomplished scientist, she managed to balance that out with being a mother at a time when that made her something of a pioneer. Obviously, it was kind of jarring to talk about her “mean beef stroganoff” before her actual scientific accomplishments and I’m not surprised that the Times has deleted that part of the article. But I don’t think there was anything really wrong with the overall point they were trying to make, which was to highlight some of difficulties she faced as a woman working in a man’s world. Naturally, that kind of emphasis would never be put on a man’s obituary, but that is the nature of the thing. There are quite a few 88 year old women who have similar stories about how they blazed the path for working women in the middle of the 20th Century. You can’t write the same stories about 88 year old men.

Guns In Texas

Another two lives cut short due to (criminal) violence and gun culture in the US. The culture of death is endemic and needs to change from top down and bottom up. Wars bring death and violence home.

Police chief: No sign of fear from slain attorney

KAUFMAN, Texas (AP) Feb. 1, 2013 — Authorities don’t know whether a Texas prosecutor who had extensive experience with organized crime feared for his life before he was fatally shot, but they’re poring through the cases he handled for leads to his killer, officials said Friday.

No arrests have been made since Assistant District Attorney Mark Hasse was gunned down in a parking lot about a block from his office at the Kaufman County Courthouse. Authorities are searching for one or two suspects. Witnesses have said the killer was dressed in black with facial features covered.

Kaufman police Chief Chris Aulbaugh said there’s no indication that Hasse, 57, had been afraid he might be killed and, although the prosecutor was a licensed peace officer, officials refused to say whether he was carrying a weapon. Hasse was chief of the organized crime unit when he was an assistant prosecutor in Dallas County in the 1980s, and he handled similar cases in Kaufman County, 33 miles southeast of Dallas.

Kaufman County District Attorney Mike McLelland said Hasse was one of 12 attorneys on his staff, all of whom handle hundreds of cases at a time.

“Anything anybody can think of, we’re looking through,” McLelland said.

More below the fold …


As a licensed peace officer in Texas, Hasse could openly carry a firearm and make arrests. According to the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement Officer Standards and Education, Hasse obtained his license in 1988 and kept it current through 1995. He then allowed it to lapse for 16 years before renewing it in July 2011.

“If you saw Mark around the office or the courthouse, he generally had a pistol,” said Bill Wirskye, a Dallas attorney who recently served as a special prosecutor on a murder case in Kaufman County.

Texas district attorney Mike McLelland, wife found dead

(CNN) March 31, 2013 – The bodies of Mike McLelland and his wife, Cynthia, were found Saturday in their home in Kaufman County, southeast of Dallas.

“I don’t know of anyone who would want to cause him harm,” Kaufman city Mayor William Fortney said. “As far as I could tell, he was doing a really good job as a district attorney.”

A law enforcement official told The Dallas Morning News that a door was apparently kicked in, and “there are shell casings everywhere.”

Authorities have not identified a suspect. Nor are they sure whether the deaths are related to the killing of county Assistant District Attorney Mark Hasse, who was killed on his way to work in January.

The county Sheriff’s Office brought in the FBI and the Texas Rangers to help with the investigation.

    It has been reported that the Dallas and Denver offices of the FBI have been comparing the Hasse shooting to that of Tom Clements, executive director of Colorado prisons. He was shot and killed as he answered the front door of his home on March 19

    The killing of Clements has been linked to Evan Spencer Ebel, 28, who died in a shootout with Texas deputies last week near Decatur, Texas. Colorado authorities said the same gun Ebel used in the shootout was the one used to kill Clements.
    Kaufman Herald Online

Tribute to a wonderful man, a great American

Mike McLelland, Kaufman County Criminal District Attorney, was raised on a ranch in the small town of Wortham, Texas. As the only son in a ranching family, he learned to cowboy at an early age.

Mike graduated Wortham High School, attended Navarro Junior College on a football scholarship and finished undergraduate studies with a degree in History from the University of Texas at Austin. Following graduation, Mike was commissioned in the Regular Army of the United States as a Second Lieutenant. Mike’s career as a branch qualified Infantry Officer spanned twenty three years. He held positions both in the United States and overseas including Desert Storm and many training missions with U.S. allies. He carried Top Secret clearance for 15+ years.

Can’t Wait

Liz Cheney is at least as dangerously unhinged from reality as her pulseless father. I am fairly certain she will be a senator from Wyoming before long. It depends on whether Sen. Mike Enzi seeks another term or not. If he doesn’t, I hear that Ms. Cheney will run for his seat, and I don’t see any way we can stop her from winning. That’s going to be a real pleasure. She’s completely nuts and she has the same insatiable thirst for blood as her pops.

Voter Suppression is Their Game

I am guessing that you can look up every bill related to voting introduced by a Republican in every legislature in the entire country and you will not find one bill that makes voting easier or that encourages more people to vote. All of the bills will be aimed at reducing early voting, making it harder to vote by absentee ballot, requiring identification that many people (non-drivers, students, married women, the elderly) do not have, or making it easier to challenge and discard provisional ballots. With the possible exception of active-duty military serving overseas, you will not see anyone benefitting from a Republican-sponsored voting bill.

Their entire aim is to reduce the number of votes cast, and to do it in a way that assures that more Democratic votes will be lost than Republican. It’s that simple. It’s a version of cheating.

Now, the Republicans and much of the press respond that this is just of flip side of the Democrats’ push for vote-by-mail, early voting, etc. But this is a representative democracy, and encouraging citizen participation is not the flip-side of discouraging citizen participation. They are not equally partisan exercises. One act is legitimate, and the other is illegitimate. One act helps people exercise their rights, and the other seeks to take away their rights.

You can argue about the merits of any particular bill, but taken in their totality, the Republicans intent is clear. From sea to shining sea, they are trying to suppress the vote. You will not find any exceptions.

Time for China to Step Up

Even though South Korea (with our help) could quickly win a war with North Korea that would unify the country and lead to prosperity on a massive scale, it is very unlikely that our side will start a war there. The fear that North Korea would explode a nuclear weapon is not the reason we won’t risk war. Even prior to their attainment of a nuclear weapon, we recognized that the South Korean capital, Seoul, is within artillery range of the DMZ, and would come under devastating attack at the outset of hostilities. For this reason, South Korea would have to want to go war before we would impose war on them. Their civilian losses would be too high for us to make that decision for them. Fear of a nuclear explosion exacerbates this situation, but it doesn’t change it.

Still, North Korea is making provocative statements on a daily basis that are growing harder to shrug off. I can’t think of another country in the world that is situated in a way that would allow them to get away with threatening to fire missiles at our country and our allies.

I think it is time for China to show some leadership here. They need to sit down with their psychotic puppet regime and tell them to dial back the rhetoric. And, if they can no longer control them, perhaps the regime doesn’t need to exist anymore. From a financial point of view, it’s hard to see how North Korea is preferable to a united Korea organized on southern principles.

Saturday Painting Palooza Vol.398

Hello again painting fans.


This week I will be continuing with the painting of the 1949 Packard.  I’m using my usual acrylic paints on a large 20×20 inch gallery-wrapped canvas.  The photo that I am using is seen directly below.

When last seen, the painting appeared as it does in the photo directly below.

Since that time, I have continued to work on the painting.

I’ve been busy.  First of all, I have straightened the righthand bumperguard.  It was rather obviously out of line but now stands proudly erect.  Moving to the left, the bumper face has been painted to match the earlier section.  Moving further, the lefthand bumperguard has now been fully painted.  Note that it mirrors the grille above as does the one to the right side.  After that, I continued to paint the far end of the bumper.  With that completed, there are only minor details on the grille and bumper. to be completed.  It is now finally time to move to the headlights above, but that will be for next week.

The current state of the painting is seen in the photo directly below.

I’ll have more progress to show you next week.  See you then.

Earlier paintings in this series can be seen here.

Minority Outreach

Rep. Don Young (R-AK) didn’t get the memo about minority outreach. He went on the radio and reminisced about how his daddy used to hire 50 or 60 wetbacks to pick tomatoes on his California ranch. Meanwhile, North Carolina Republican Pat McCrory has shuttered his office of Latino affairs, claiming that his administration views all constituents as equals.

These are self-inflicted wounds. I don’t think they will stop hitting themselves in the face anytime soon.